by KE4AVB » Thu Nov 30, 2017 12:06 am
I don't know what it came off either but it appears to be bent due the wear marks.
38Racing I don't well how keep your shop but I always put away my tools, accounting for all of them, and clean the work area after each repair is completed. Unaccounted for parts including fasteners are verified why they are present before signing off on a repair job. During my final inspections I have found tools like sockets struck on bolt heads in hard to reach areas or a hemostat clamp not removed after repairs.
I know it is more convenience to just lay the tools on the work bench but I had too many to walk off that way when I worked in a multi-tech shop setup. I don't have that problem here now but it is a habit that works best for me as I can always locate my tools instead taking extra time to hunt them. I also found that the boxes need to locked when I was away too in those shops.
If you have custom tools and one ends walking off or customer drives off with it still on the equipment can it be expensive to redesign and have it made again. I now keep a copy of the plans on file for any my latest tools so I can just hand a copy to my machinist friend for to remake them. I just got through having a $70 tool custom modified to do male F56 terminals and if I lose it I would be out another $70 just for the core tool plus the machine shop fees as it takes a carbide cutter to modify it.
Edit: Everyone has their own way of doing things that works for them. The above is what works best for me.
The truest measure of society is the how it treats its elderly, its pets, and its prisoners.